This is an original vinyl rip at 24bit/192khz by Sidmal
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Kinks, The – Soap Opera
Label:
Velvel – VEL-LP-79833
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue, Gatefold 180 Gram
Country: US
Released: 2008
Genre: Rock
Style: Classic Rock
Tracklist .
A1 Everybody's A Star (Starmaker)
A2 Ordinary People
A3 Rush Hour Blues
A4 Nine To Five
A5 When Work Is Over
A6 Have Another Drink
B1 Underneath The Neon Sign
B2 Holiday Romance
B3 You Make It All Worthwhile
B4 Ducks On The Wall
B5 (A) Face In The Crowd
B6 You Can't Stop The Music
Companies etc
Phonographic Copyright (p) – Konk
Copyright (c) – Konk
Licensed To – Velvel
Manufactured By – Koch Records
Distributed By – Koch Records
Credits
Art Direction – Pat Doyle (2)
Illustration – Joe Petagno
Written-By, Arranged By, Producer – Raymond Douglas Davies*
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Barcode: 6 34677 98331 3
Release Date
May, 1975
Genre: Pop/Rock,
Styles:
Contemporary Pop/Rock
Rock & Roll
Album Rock
Hard Rock
Prog-Rock
Recording Date
August, 1974 - October, 1974
Allmusic.com
Review by Stephen Thomas Erlewine [-]
If there ever were a testament to Ray Davies' stubbornness and ornery perversity, it's Soap Opera. Released after the draining, two-part, hopelessly muddled rock opera Preservation, Soap Opera is the grandest concept album the Kinks ever made. Davies' tackled a topic that seemed manageable compared to Preservation -- how "Ordinary People" escape the doldrums with dreams of stardoms -- but conceived the production as a bit of a radio play, with prominent guest vocalists and narration. Improbably, it feels larger, campier, more excessive than Preservation, even if it's considerably more focused and consistent. The main problem is, its presentation is so damn silly that it's hard to hear individual songs. Nothing here works as well as the best of Preservation, Act 1, but it holds together better as a record. Even so, Soap Opera winds up rather unsettling. Not only is it hard to get the gist of Davies' narrative, but there's not enough, musically or lyrically, to make it compelling. Then, there's the nagging feeling that this isn't really a Kinks album, but rather a Ray Davies solo project in disguise; the songs are certainly Ray's, but there's little that sounds like the Kinks, largely due to that ludicrous production. This isn't just an outsider's suspicion, either -- Dave Davies and Mick Avory both mention this unease in Peter Doggett's liner notes to the 1999 reissue of the album, but the true indication of the extent of Davies' Soap Opera indulgence is that he never was allowed to go this far over the top again